Isoreticular Crystallization of Highly Porous Cubic Covalent Organic Cage Compounds*.
Svetlana IvanovaEva KösterJulian J HolsteinNiklas D KellerGuido H CleverThomas BeinFlorian BeuerlePublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2021)
Modular frameworks featuring well-defined pore structures in microscale domains establish tailor-made porous materials. For open molecular solids however, maintaining long-range order after desolvation is inherently challenging, since packing is usually governed by only a few supramolecular interactions. Here we report on two series of nanocubes obtained by co-condensation of two different hexahydroxy tribenzotriquinacenes (TBTQs) and benzene-1,4-diboronic acids (BDBAs) with varying linear alkyl chains in 2,5-position. n-Butyl groups at the apical position of the TBTQ vertices yielded soluble model compounds, which were analyzed by mass spectrometry and NMR spectroscopy. In contrast, methyl-substituted cages spontaneously crystallized as isostructural and highly porous solids with BET surface areas and pore volumes of up to 3426 m2 g-1 and 1.84 cm3 g-1 . Single crystal X-ray diffraction and sorption measurements revealed an intricate cubic arrangement of alternating micro- and mesopores in the range of 0.97-2.2 nm that are fine-tuned by the alkyl substituents at the BDBA linker.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- metal organic framework
- ionic liquid
- magnetic resonance
- tissue engineering
- liquid chromatography
- highly efficient
- air pollution
- water soluble
- single molecule
- crystal structure
- electron microscopy
- contrast enhanced
- high performance liquid chromatography
- energy transfer
- gas chromatography
- capillary electrophoresis
- tandem mass spectrometry